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Archive for October, 2014

Hoop Dreams: Teaching Values Through Basketball in Congo

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 10, 2014

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Hoop Dreams: Teaching Values Through Basketball in Congo

It’s the children the world almost breaks who grow up to save it.

– -Frank Warren- –

Hoop Dreams: Teaching Values Through Basketball in Congo

“You come here, you play hard, you work hard,”shares Dario Merlo. He was just 11-years-old when his family fled their home in Goma, to escape the horrors of the Rwandan massacre. Returning in 2005, Dario pledged to make a difference. He created the Promo Jeune Basket (Promote Youth Basketball), an organization working to empower the youth of Africa. But, this is a league unlike any other — in that, it uses basketball to inspire young children to take interest in their education and civil responsibilities. For these children, basketball is far more than just a game. { read more }

Be The Change

Volunteer for a youth activity in your community; find the means to inspire the youth of today.

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10 Creative Rituals To Learn From

Gandhi’s Ten Rules for Changing the World

Resilience: The Opposite of Depression

Maya Angelou On Resilience and Children

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They Call Me “Clean-Up”

This week’s inspiring video: They Call Me “Clean-Up”
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Oct 09, 2014
They Call Me

They Call Me “Clean-Up”

James Boatner has a grizzled beard, a giant shopping cart and an unusual street name. Residents of West Oakland know him simply as "Clean-Up", because that’s what he does. The soft spoken homeless man spends his days sweeping the streets he has lived on for over 15 years. He is a familiar face in the neighborhood and beloved by its children. In this short film, 71-year-old "Clean-Up" speaks with quiet dignity about his life on the streets and his dream of writing a memoir that will give the world a window into what it means to be homeless.
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Serve All

Landfill Harmonic – Film Trailer

Everybody Can Be Great, Martin Luther King, Jr.

Fred Rogers Lifetime Achievement Emmy Award

Money and Life – Trailer

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The Relationship Between Self-Compassion & Procrastination

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 9, 2014

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The Relationship Between Self-Compassion & Procrastination

You can search throughout the entire universe for someone who is more deserving of you love and affection than you are yourself, and that person is not to be found anywhere.

– The Buddha –

The Relationship Between Self-Compassion & Procrastination

What causes us to procrastinate, and how can we change our relationship with this tricky habit? Beyond “just getting started,” consultant and life coach Linda Graham suggests that self-compassion may be the key to addressing procrastination and its cycle of negativity. { read more }

Be The Change

After finishing this article, take a moment to close your eyes and say something kind to yourself. You’re great!

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Gandhi’s Ten Rules for Changing the World

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Ladder to the Pleiades

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Slow Medicine: An Interview With Victoria Sweet

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October 8, 2014

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Slow Medicine: An Interview With Victoria Sweet

The secret in caring for the patient is caring for the patient

– Victoria Sweet –

Slow Medicine: An Interview With Victoria Sweet

Laguna Honda Hospital in San Francisco was, as far as anyone knows, the last almshouse, or Hotel-Dieu, in this country — a hospital for the sick and poor. Dr. Victoria Sweet took a position there, a place where she and other physicians could practice a different kind of medicine — an intimate, intuitive, deeply skilled medicine focused on continuing care and observation of the patient, minus computers. This powerful interview shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Each of us has someone we are caring for, who needs help and attention. Practice observing on a deeper level, trying to intuit what that person needs.

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A Moving Letter from Fiona Apple

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SolePower: Putting a Charge In Your Step

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October 7, 2014

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SolePower: Putting a Charge In Your Step

When it is obvious that the goals cannot be reached, don’t adjust the goals, adjust the action steps.

– Confucius –

SolePower: Putting a Charge In Your Step

Matthew Stanton is the co-founder of SolePower, and his invention can possibly transform a problem that affects over a billion people worldwide: The lack of access to electricity. Check out this game-changing video that shows you how a basic shoe insert allows a user to convert energy into electrical power simply by walking, and then use that energy to charge electronics like cellphones. { read more }

Be The Change

To find out more about this innovative approach to creating energy, and its vast potential to the world, visit the SolePower website. { more }

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Because I’m Happy

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Awakin Weekly: The Place That is Free of Suffering

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Place That is Free of Suffering
by Eckhart Tolle

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgThe world promises fulfillment somewhere in time, and there is a continuous striving toward that fulfillment in time. Many times people feel, "Yes, now I have arrived," and then they realize that, no, they haven’t arrived, and then the striving continues. It is expressed beautifully in A Course in Miracles, where it says that the dictum of the ego is "Seek but do not find." People look to the future for salvation, but the future never arrives. So ultimately, suffering arises through not finding.

And that is the beginning of an awakening-when the realization dawns that "Perhaps this is not the way. Perhaps I will never get to where I am striving to reach; perhaps it’s not in the future at all." After having been lost in the world, suddenly, through the pressure of suffering, the realization comes that the answers may not be found out there in worldly attainment and in the future. That’s an important point for many people to reach. That sense of deep crisis — when the world as they have known it, and the sense of self that they have known that is identified with the world, become meaningless.

That happened to me. I was just that close to suicide and then something else happened-a death of the sense of self that lived through identifications, identifications with my story, things around me, the world. Something arose at that moment that was a sense of deep and intense stillness and aliveness, beingness. I later called it "presence." I realized that beyond words, that is who I am. But this realization wasn’t a mental process. I realized that that vibrantly alive, deep stillness is who I am. Years later, I called that stillness "pure consciousness," whereas everything else is the conditioned consciousness. The human mind is the conditioned consciousness that has taken form as thought. The conditioned consciousness is the whole world that is created by the conditioned mind. Everything is our conditioned consciousness; even objects are. Conditioned consciousness has taken birth as form and then that becomes the world.

To be lost in the conditioned seems to be necessary for humans. It seems to be part of their path to be lost in the world, to be lost in the mind, which is the conditioned consciousness. Then, due to the suffering that arises out of being lost, one finds the unconditioned as oneself. And that is why we need the world to transcend the world. So I’m infinitely grateful for having been lost. The purpose of the world is for you to be lost in it, ultimately. The purpose of the world is for you to suffer, to create the suffering that seems to be what is needed for the awakening to happen. And then once the awakening happens, with it comes the realization that suffering is unnecessary now. You have reached the end of suffering because you have transcended the world. It is the place that is free of suffering.

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Some Good News

Picasso On Intuition
Moral Courage & The Story of Sister Megan Rice
Fluro Zebra (Age 10) Is Making The World Smile

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Ripples In The 5th Grade
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New York’s Pop Up Repair Shop

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 6, 2014

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New York's Pop Up Repair Shop

It is the neglect of timely repair that makes rebuilding necessary.

– Richard Whately –

New York’s Pop Up Repair Shop

Your lamp broke? Oh well, buy a new one. Your toaster oven broke? Again, just buy a new one. Are you one of those people who are more apt to throw out older, broken household items and just buy new replacements — instead of perhaps thinking about giving it a chance to be fixed? Well, for Sandra Goldmark and her husband Michael Banta, they finally wanted to try and create a solution that “aimed at breaking the cycle of use-and-discard goods.” And thus, New York City’s Pop Up Repair Shop was born. Says resource specialist Darby Hoover, “We need to remind ourselves that there is value in repair and there is value in trying to keep something out of the landfill.” { read more }

Be The Change

Before being so quick to discard something, take a second to think if you – or maybe someone you know – could perhaps fix or repair the item.

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When Kindness Flows: Pumpkin Pie, A Daily Double, & Checkout Line

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

About KindSpring

For over a decade the KindSpring community has focused on inner transformation, while collectively changing the world with generosity, gratitude, and trust. We are 100% volunteer-run and totally non-commercial. KindSpring is a labor of love.

Inspiring Quote

When I see you through my eyes, I think we are different. When I see you through my heart, I know we are the same. -Doe Zantamata

Member of the Week

thumb.jpgSTLC! We loved the reflections from your student community’s Kindness Challenge. Thank you for sowing seeds of generosity, from the inside-out! Send STLC some KarmaBucks and say hello.

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October 5, 2014

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space EditorEditor’s note: We’re just a few days into KindSpring’s 21-Day Kindness Challenge, and already blown away by your genuine stories and photos from around the globe! Read more, share a story, and follow #KindSpring21. space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space sharonraew wrote: “I baked a batch of pumpkin tarts to share with the guys in my department (9) and also a pumpkin pie for the son of one of my co-workers who is a single Dad.”
space awom7604 wrote: “My son came early in the morning today to help me with general cleaning of the house. I really appreciated this kind gesture and wish him blessed.”
space ivomursa wrote: “Day 2: I emailed an old friend I have not seen in a while and her positive response was immediate. It made my heart warm. We’ll meet soon.”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 A beautiful way to wait in line.
Story2 One person’s kindness Daily Double …all before 8:30am.
Story3 When being kind just flows– insights on small acts of love.
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Idea of the Week

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A Humanitarian’s 4 Decades Long Adventure In Africa

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 5, 2014

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A Humanitarian's 4 Decades Long Adventure In Africa

Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom.

– Martin Luther King, Jr. –

A Humanitarian’s 4 Decades Long Adventure In Africa

When 24-year-old Molly Melching traveled to Senegal as an exchange student, she felt so at home that she decided to stay on after her program ended. Over the next forty years, Molly founded and continues to run Tostan, a non-profit organization turning the traditional model of social development on its head. Rather than short-term, top-down approaches, Tostan uses a holistic three-year, non-formal education program that has already had incredible successes, among them the abandonment of female genital cutting. Molly shares: “Our participants discuss questions like, ‘Does everybody really have the right to be free from violence?’ If they decide that’s true, then there are certain practices in the community that may threaten that right. Then it’s about giving the space for dialogue and discussion, allowing the change to come from within.” { read more }

Be The Change

Find an organization that takes a long-term perspective and works from within communities to facilitate social change. How can you support these service men and women?

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Reading, Writing, Empathy: The Rise Of Social Emotional Learning

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October 4, 2014

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Reading, Writing, Empathy: The Rise Of Social Emotional Learning

The great gift of human beings is that we have the power of empathy.

– Meryl Streep –

Reading, Writing, Empathy: The Rise Of Social Emotional Learning

There’s a lot of focus these days on how to improve subject learning in schools, but what about the emotional development of our children? In 2005, researchers at Yale developed a training program called RULER to help teachers integrate emotional literacy into their everyday curriculum. Studies are now showing that students in RULER classrooms aren’t just expressing themselves more effectively — they’re also getting better grades. Read on to learn more about the impetus behind RULER and its implications for education. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to imagine the feelings that others around you may be experiencing. This may help generate more empathy the next time someone or something upsets you!

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